![]() |
Research & Innovation Policy Dialogue Workshops
ANU College of Arts and Social Sciences
|
Public sector and NGO innovationResources
9am–1pm, Monday 15 September, 2008. Roundtable by invitation only. Topic briefPublic sectors are always innovating, but we have not always recognised this, or explicitly sought to strengthen this aspect of government. In the past, improvements in the public sector were not badged as innovation outcomes per se. Governments tended to focus on compliance with procedures, due process and financial accountability - engendering a “steady state” ethos. This situation has changed due to the increased prominence of innovation as a major feature of national policy landscapes. Arguably, the emphasis on innovation in the private sector has influenced thinking in the public sector. Many governments have adopted notions of strategy, outcome measurement, accounting practices and inter-organisational coordination derived from business. Similarly, an emphasis on social inclusion and more explicit social advocacy stances emulate practices in civil society. The result is that modern governments tend to operate in more complex contexts than in the past and articulate attempts at improving performance in service delivery more explicitly as innovation. This shift in the policy narrative highlights some important contradictions and challenges. Businesses make money by taking risks and we require governments to handle the risks and uncertainties that markets cannot cope with. Yet, pressures for greater transparency and accountability may have led governments to adopt more risk-averse management methods and procedures than business - creating a misalignment between missions and the capability to deliver these missions. From this perspective, innovation in public service delivery requires governments to develop and deploy ways of managing some types of risk that exceed performance parameters in the business sector – mainly with regard to the consequences of acting too late and/or locking into worse solutions than might otherwise have been deployed (e.g. dealing with major threats such as possible pandemics, climate change, national security etc). The determinants of innovation in public services include the:
Key questions
|
|
Page last updated: 12 October 2008 Please direct all enquiries to: RIPP secretariat Page authorised by: Mark Matthews |
| The Australian National University — CRICOS Provider Number 00120C |